Statement of Significance
Cohasset Central Cemetery contains the oldest burying ground in the
town of Cohasset, with graves dating from 1705 to the present. From
slate to marble, then to granite and now often back to slate, its markers
are witness to the passage of time, to changing fortune, custom and
style, all tempered by the individual tastes of those who placed them
here. The peaceful setting and its accessibility to the Town Village
draws visitors, recreational walkers and researchers through all seasons.
The vista of Little Harbor and the Atlantic Ocean beyond speaks to the
seafaring history of Cohasset.
The cemetery is eligible for the National Register under Criterion A
and C at the local level, and fulfills Criteria Consideration D for cemeteries
with distinctive design features. Cohasset Central Cemetery retains integrity
of location, setting, materials, design, workmanship, feeling, and association.
The demographics of those buried in the cemetery reflect Cohasset’s
historical development. They include late 17th century settlers, members
of prominent 18th and 19th century seafaring families, Portuguese and
Irish immigrants, military veterans from the Revolutionary, Civil, and
two World Wars, and wealthy 19th and 20th century summer residents, including
several well known actors. The cemetery is also significant as the burial
site of the victims of the shipwreck of the brig St. John, which sank
off the shore of Cohasset in 1849. Cohasset Central Cemetery is also significant
for its excellent collection of gravestone art. Well-represented is the
work by the Scituate school of stone carvers: the first and second North
River carvers (1700-1778) and the Vinals, father and son (c.1715-1781).
In addition to stones from these carvers, the cemetery contains several
children’s stones from the Ebenezer Soule, Jr. (1758-1773) workshop
of Plympton bearing the signature “Medusa” heads with wild,
wavy hair. (Map#24- The cemetery’s funerary art also includes other
18th century slate stones with winged cherub and winged skull motifs;
19th century marble stones with willow and urn, obelisks, scrolls, statuary
and pointed arch forms; and 20th century granite monuments ranging from
simple stones to the elaborate Celtic Cross commemorating the victims
of the wreck of the St. John.
Located near the town common and village center, the cemetery was established
in the first years of the 18th century to serve the Conahasset area of
Hingham, which became Cohasset. The Conahasset lands were surveyed and
divided up among qualified landowners in 1670, after which settlement
began. In 1717, the General Court of the Province of Massachusetts Bay
set Cohasset off as the second parish and second precinct of Hingham.
The change in name from Conahasset to Cohasset dates from that time.
Originally located on common land and administered by the town, the “center
burying ground” was laid out near the main road from Conahasset
to Hingham, today’s North Main Street. The “road to the burying
ground” is now Joy Place, which runs along the western boundary
of the cemetery. The street was renamed in the first half of the 19th
century for Captain Joseph Joy, whose 1808 house stood at the beginning
of the lane. The cemetery served the largest population center in the
newly settled area, which extended from the boundary at North Scituate
to the shore at Jerusalem Road. This represented the extent of the first
and second divisions of land in Conahasset. Three other cemeteries were
laid out in Cohasset in the eighteenth century. They include Beechwood
Cemetery, which is still active, in the village of Beechwood; Green Gate
Cemetery in North Cohasset, which was active until the 1960s; and Cedar
Street Cemetery, which served a group of families on Hull Street and North
Main Street until 1867.
The earliest burial in the Cohasset Central Cemetery is that of Margaret
(Hardin) Tower, who with her husband, Ibrook, was among the first settlers
of Cohasset. Although Margaret Tower was the first burial in the cemetery,
the oldest gravestone in the cemetery is that of Sarah Pratt, who died
in 1706. Margaret Tower’s stone was placed on her grave several
years later. Members of Cohasset’s founding families buried here
include the first minister to the Parish at Conahasset, Rev. Nehemiah
Hobart, and his wife, who died in 1736 and 1741 respectively. The third
minister in Cohasset, Rev. John Browne, who was a prominent advocate of
liberty during the Revolution, also was buried in Cohasset Central Cemetery
upon his death in 1791. The names of other founding families such as Tower,
Pratt, Lincoln, Bates, Beal, Whitcom, and Hobart grace many early gravestones
in the burial ground. Mordecai Lincoln (d. 1808), son of Isaac Lincoln
and grandson of Mordecai of North Scituate who had operated mills and
a small iron works on Turtle Island, also is buried here.
The earliest gravestones in Cohasset Central Cemetery are primarily made
from gray slate. Many carry death’s head motifs (photos 1-5), which
dually symbolized the inevitability of death (skull) and the immortality
achieved through religious redemption (wings). Well-represented in the
cemetery is the work by the Scituate school of stone carvers: the first
and second North River carvers (1700-1778) and the father and son workshop
of Jacob Vinal Sr. and Jr. (1715-1781). In addition to these local workshops,
the cemetery contains children’s stones from the Ebenezer Soule,
Jr. workshop of Plympton (1758-1773), bearing their signature “Medusa”
heads with wild, wavy hair.
The gravestone images cut by these carvers were the first and purest
form of folk art that originated in the American colonies, and they provide
a unique sensibility of the period, its belief system and style progression.
For example, the death’s head executed by the first and second North
River carvers remained their symbol for over fifty years, unaffected by
stylistic change taking place in the surrounding burial grounds.
Their material and tools limited the artistic efforts of the carvers.
The slate they quarried originated from a bed in the western part of what
was then Scituate but is now Hanover. It was geologically mature with
a dense, hard texture and was extremely difficult to cut with the poor
steel tools available. To avoid splitting the stone, the North River carvers
devised a cutting method that produced a triangular notch in the slate.
These small notches were arranged into starbursts, borders and winged
skulls, a technique that continued to distinguish their work, even after
a softer slate was employed. For example, the gravestone of the Reverend
Nehemiah Hobart (photo 5, map #12) displays an intricate border of Catherine
wheels and sand dollars, the later a nod to nearby local oceanic life.
The Vinal family of stone carvers, consisting of father Jacob and son
Jacob, Jr. were prolific and carved up to four hundred stones in the northern
Plymouth County area as well as Cohasset, and Braintree. Jacob Vinal,
the father, probably learned to cut stone from the first North River carver,
since much of their decorative work (hammered starbursts, flowers and
border designs) was similar. Vinal was unique, however, in introducing
smiles into his carved images of spirit skulls. This motif was in contrast
to the gloomy skull caricatures employed by the North River carver. One
example of a Vinal smiling skull can be seen on the Aaron Pratt gravestone
(photo 2).
One symbol that appears to have been carved only in the year 1741 was
that of the heart-mouth (photo 3, map #7) on the Vinal spirit skulls,
a symbol that temporarily replaced the usual slanting teeth. It has been
suggested that this symbol shift represents a specific sentiment tied
to the religious revivals of the period. Cohasset has three of the thirteen
known heart-mouths in the region. They are found only on children’s
gravestones, and in Cohasset they belong to the Stetson family. Of the
five Stetson children’s stones, three of them bear the heart-mouth:
Ezekiel (d. 1732), John (d. 1740) and Lydia (d. 1741).
The style progression that is present on the gravestone carvings in Cohasset
Central Cemetery has been connected to the ideologies manifested in Puritan
Massachusetts in the 17th and 18th centuries. It has been theorized that
the decline of death head images coincides with the decline of orthodox
Puritanism, which was influenced by the religious revival movement of
the 18th century known as the Great Awakening. The exclusivity of the
predestination doctrine was cast aside and a new doctrine offered salvation
for all. New images, which reflected release of the spirit in the form
of cherubim with human faces, began to appear on gravestones. Fleshy facial
images began to replace the skeletal caricatures that had been the only
symbol allowed. These human faces and cherubim can be seen in the Cohasset
Central Cemetery, as adapted by Jacob Vinal, Jr. and other unknown carvers.
The Great Awakening of the 1740s and the promotion of the idea that salvation
was available to all, not just an elect few as Puritan doctrine held,
ultimately resulted in a secularization of funerary art in New England.
Cohasset Central Cemetery’s stones reflect the loosening of religious
strictures and an abandonment of religious iconography in stone motifs.
By the time of the American Revolution, classical ornament such as urns,
swags, and willows associated with the democracies of Greece and Rome
became popular. White marble also began to supercede gray slate as the
preferred gravestone material, though classical motifs also appear on
many gray slate stones in Cohasset Central Cemetery. As death became associated
more with gentle rest than the doorway to judgment, Americans increasingly
began calling burying grounds by the term “cemetery” or dormitory.
While little is known about the identity of the North River Carvers,
the Vinal family of Scituate is well documented. Jacob Vinal (1670-1736)
and Jacob Jr. (1700-1788) were the principal gravestone suppliers for
Scituate, Cohasset and Hingham for about eighty years. Jacob, Sr. took
up gravestone carving when he was about forty years old, sharing a quarry
with the first North River carver. Credited with about 100 stones carved
over the last three decades of his life, he died a wealthy man, suggesting
that he was active in more endeavors than gravestone carving. Jacob Vinal,
Jr., who had assisted his father, continued to carve slate markers into
his later years, producing some 200 to 300 gravestones and expanding the
range of his business into Braintree and Marshfield. Upon his death, he
transferred his slate quarry to his son Jacob, who did not take up carving,
ending the gravestone-carving era of the Vinal family.
The community of Cohasset grew steadily over the course of the 18th century,
more than doubling its population by the Revolutionary War. Conahasset
colony became the second precinct of Hingham in 1717 and was incorporated
as the Town of Cohasset in 1770. The community was quickly moving from
a primarily agricultural economy to one based on maritime pursuits such
as commercial fishing and shipping. As the population of Cohasset grew
and the first generation of settlers began to pass away, the town of
Cohasset saw the need to make an official survey of the “center
burying ground” and plan for its expansion. In 1787, a committee
made up of residents Samuel Bates, Deacon Abel Kent, Micah Nichols,
and Joseph Beal was organized to carry out these duties. The committee
documented the burying ground with a crude map and carried out a land
swap with an adjacent owner to increase the size of the burying ground
and straighten the line of the “road to the burying ground”
from North Main Street (Joy Place). The committee records the burying
ground as being one acre, 134 rods in 1787. Nearly 35 years later, in
1825, Cohasset Central Cemetery was expanded again when Samuel and Joanna
Bates deeded the town ¾ of an acre of land between the burying
ground and North Main Street to increase useable space.
Fishing, shipbuilding, salt making, and other maritime trades peaked
in Cohasset between 1845 and 1855, when the fishing industry alone employed
400 men and 44 vessels. As Cohasset’s maritime economy grew in the
mid-19th century, the names of seafaring families such as Lothrop, Larry,
Snow, Bailey, and Tilden began appearing on stones in Cohasset Central
Cemetery. Several gravestones read simply, “Lost at Sea” and
mark empty graves. Portuguese names also began to appear on stones in
the 19th century, reflecting the rising immigration of that group to the
area between 1845 and 1875. Several Civil War veterans and men killed
in action are buried in Cohasset Central Cemetery. Most prominent among
them is Levi B. Gaylord, who won the Congressional Medal of Honor for
heroic action at Fort Stedman, VA. He is Cohasset’s only known Congressional
Medal of Honor recipient. The memorial stones of many of the town’s
leading citizens in the 19th century, such as clergymen, doctors, merchants,
ship owners, farmers, fishermen, and craftsmen, also appear in Cohasset
Central Cemetery. Deacon Abel Kent, who surveyed the burying ground in
1787, died at age 93 in 1859 and is buried here, as is the Rev. Joseph
Osgood, who was the minister of the First Parish for over fifty years
and a leading citizen in Cohasset’s civic life. Osgood helped to
establish the first central school system and the elementary school of
this system bears his name. Osgood also was instrumental in establishing
the Town’s first public library. His interest in education and knowledge
was carried over to his leadership on the first Committee on Town History,
which sponsored Bigelow’s Narrative Histories and Davenport’s
Genealogies. The Rev. Osgood died in 1898.
Cohasset’s picturesque, rocky coastline has attracted summer tourists
since the mid-1820s. By the late-19th century, Cohasset was popular as
a summer resort destination, particularly for wealthy businessmen and
their families from Boston. The Sears, Codmans, and Appletons, to name
a few, were regular summer visitors by 1872. These part-time residents
built cottages and large summer homes with ocean views along Jerusalem
Road and Atlantic Avenue. Some summer visitors eventually became year-round
residents and are buried in Cohasset Central Cemetery. The well-known
Boston Brahmin names of Seavers, Richardson, Sears, and Howe all appear
on stones in the cemetery. Clarence Barron, the founder of the Boston
News Bureau, Barron’s magazine, National Financial Weekly, and one-time
owner of the Wall Street Journal, was a long-time summer resident of Cohasset
and a local philanthropist. His two granddaughters, Jessie Bancroft Cox
and Jane Bancroft Cook are buried in Cohasset Central Cemetery.
A large number of nationally known actors, actresses, and theater personalities
also summered in Cohasset in the late 19th century. The locations of their
residences, clustered near Cohasset Harbor, were known variously as Actors’
Row and Brass Button Avenue. Two recognized thespians, tragedian Lawrence
P. Barrett (d. 1891) and comedic actor Henry W. Stuart (d. 1903) are buried
in Cohasset Central Cemetery along with members of their families. Stuart’s
grave carries his stage name, Stuart Robson, and is located with Barrett’s
in the northern section of the cemetery, near the water’s edge.
William Hanlon, a member of the Hanlon Brothers pantomime theater company
and an acknowledged pioneer of vaudeville, is also buried in Cohasset
Central Cemetery. Hanlon formed his theater company with his five brothers
upon emigrating to the U.S. from England, where they had performed acrobatic
and aerial shows. By the time they moved to Cohasset, where they kept
a practice studio, the Hanlon Brothers were working as producers and directors.
William lived on Jerusalem Road, and his brother Edward lived on Sohier
Street.
In 1867, the Town of Cohasset turned Cohasset Central Cemetery over to
a private association of townspeople. That same year, Edward Everett Tower
conveyed a parcel of land north of the original burying ground, bringing
the acreage of the cemetery up to the road line of North Main Street.
Another gift of land came in 1873, when Cohasset resident Charles S. Bates
donated a tract of land in the northwest portion of the cemetery. The
addition of this acreage brought the cemetery to its present 4.286-acre
form. Charles Bates also donated funds to construct the brick receiving
tomb (now a caretaker’s building; map #15). A hearse road called
Garden Way (map 4) was cut into the southern valley of Cohasset Central
Cemetery ca. 1873, stretching east-west from Joy Place to near the water’s
edge.
The late 19th and early 20th centuries brought significant economic change
to the town of Cohasset as fishing and other maritime industries died
out in the 1880s. The community retained a diverse economy of agriculture,
summer tourism, various trades, and some manufacturing. The period between
1850 and 1915 also saw a major influx of Azorean Portuguese, Irish, and
Italian immigrants into the town. The remains of forty-five Irish immigrants
killed in the wreck of the brig St. John are buried in Cohasset Central
Cemetery in a common grave below the top of the north hill. The brig,
which was carrying famine refugees from the Irish counties of Galway and
Clare, was bound for Boston in October of 1849 when a storm blew the vessel
off course as it approached Massachusetts Bay. The ship anchored near
Minot’s Lighthouse outside Cohasset Harbor to ride out the storm,
but the anchors failed to hold. The ship ran aground on submerged ledge
and broke into two pieces. Out of 120 passengers and crew, only 21 survived
the wreck. Writer Henry David Thoreau visited Cohasset after reading of
the wreck in the Boston newspaper. Thoreau later recounted the story of
the St. John in the first chapter of his book, Cape Cod. The Rev. Joseph
Osgood of the Cohasset Unitarian Church initially performed services,
but this was not acceptable to the Catholic Church, which dispatched Father
John Roddan of St. Mary’s Parish in West Quincy to perform another
service. This burial represented the first Catholic presence in the Town
of Cohasset. Though buried and memorialized in 1849, it was not until
1914 that the gravesite was officially commemorated with a marker. That
year, the Ancient Order of Hibernians erected an 18-foot Celtic cross
to commemorate the death of all 99 Irish citizens aboard the St. John.
The Celtic Cross bears the seals of the Ancient Order of Hibernians and
its Ladies Auxiliary. It reads:
This Cross was erected and dedicated May 30, 1914 by the A.O.H. and L.A.A.O.H.
of Massachusetts to mark the final resting place of about forty five Irish
emigrants from a total company of ninety nine who lost their lives on
Grampus Ledge, off Cohasset, October 7, 1849 in the wreck of the brig
St. John from Galway, Ireland. R.I.P.
As the 20th century progressed, many World War I and World War II veterans
were also buried in Cohasset Central Cemetery. Their graves are marked
by flag stands given by the American Legion Post and Veterans of Foreign
Wars Cohasset chapters. More recently, prizewinning sculptor and farmer
Richardson White was buried here upon his death in 1993. The White Family
has resided in Cohasset on their Jerusalem Road farm, called Holly Hill,
since the 1840s. Mr. White’s artistic subject matter focused primarily
on horses. His work “Great Horse” is part of the collection
of the Museum of Fine Arts, Boston, and his “Rearing Thoroughbred”
is installed outside the Massachusetts Society for the Prevention of Cruelty
to Animals in Jamaica Plain, Massachusetts.
The board of the Cohasset Central Cemetery continues to manage and maintain
the cemetery. Alongside the “Old Slates” and the marble or
granite stones of earlier times are two 20th century columbaria. One of
the first on the South Shore, the Cumner Columbarium was constructed in
1982. Named after a former president of the cemetery association, it stands
along Joy Place. A larger facility, the Tower Columbarium was added in
1988. it is named for a former treasurer of the Cemetery and direct descendant
of the first person to be buried in Cohasset Central Cemetery. This additional
space has provided for the future of this Colonial Burying Ground whose
roots go back beyond the town itself but whose eyes are still upon the
future.